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The 2014 FA WSL was the fourth season of the FA WSL, the top-level women's football league of England.The season began on 30 March and ended on 12 October. [1]Liverpool L.F.C. are the defending champions from the 2013 FA WSL.
The division was established in 2014 as the FA Women's Super League 2 (WSL 2) and renamed the FA Women's Championship prior to the 2018–19 season. [1] " The FA " was subsequently dropped from the league name ahead of the 2022–23 season , [ 2 ] prior to new ownership for the 2024–25 season by clubs in the first and second tiers.
The Women's Championship (formerly The FA Women's Championship) is the second-highest division of women's football in England. The division was established in 2014 as the FA Women's Super League 2 (WSL 2). WSL 2 replaced the previous level 2 division, the FA Women's Premier League (WPL) National Division, which ended after the 2012–13 season.
With the WSL 2 trophy in 2014. League. FA Women's Premier League National Division. Champions: 2010–11, 2011–12, 2012–13; FA WSL 2. Champions: 2014; FA Women's Premier League Northern Division. Champions: 1999–2000 (as Blyth Spartans Kestrels), 2004–05, 2008–09; Cup. FA Women's Cup. Runners-up: 2009; FA Women's Premier League Cup ...
The following is a list of every club which has competed in the Women's Super League - the highest level of women's football in England - since its inception in 2011. All statistics here refer to time in the WSL only (excludes Spring Series), with the exception of 'most recent finish' (which refers to all levels of play) and 'last promotion' (which refers to the club's last promotion from a ...
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Women's Super League and Women's Championship clubs agree to form a club-owned organisation that will run women's professional football in England from 2024/25. WSL takeover: WSL and Championship ...
The WFA was founded in November 1969 as the Ladies Football Association of Great Britain, when the main women's football competitions were Regional Leagues.After the English Football Association reversed its 1921 ban on women's games at its grounds, the WFA Cup began in 1970–71, a national competition initially including many clubs outside of England.